On Sat, Nov 3, 2018 at 7:11 AM Felix Stalder <fe...@openflows.com> wrote:

>  Our task, in my view, is to develop new languages, and new
> esthetics, to account for, and deal with, the sharply increased
> complexity. That means, that there is no single privileged point-of-view
> or layer of analysis. If there is any strength, it will come out of
> multiplicity, out of ways of translating one set of explicit experiences
> into another one, showing that how and why resonate with each other.


This is totally persuasive to me, and it's what I have been doing since
2008. However the uptake of such efforts appears somewhat low.

The corporate Internet has been one massive effort to deal with complexity,
essentially by individualizing it, in order to streamline the bureaucratic
aspects of life and reduce the daunting challenge of consumer choice. Web
2.0 has largely exhausted the population and left little energy for
progressive networked media. The most common nostalgia is not for class
consciousness but for a free afternoon with no bells and whistles of any
kind.

I am curious about specific projects and/or social trends that go in the
direction you suggest, Felix. Say more.

Identity politics is definitely not something we can abandon in the US.
That would leave only corporate liberalism and national populism. But
identity politics as developed so far is not capable of articulating the
multiplicity of positions in society, which is what liberalism used to do
relatively better than any other form of really existing governance. Obama
represents the pinnacle and decline of liberalism's capacity to manage
social complexity through government. As for market forces, they have
failed tragically, as the election of Bolsonaro by WhatsApp proves if you
didn't already know.

So, Felix, you have stated the problem pretty well. Let's really go further
with this one. In current identity politics, translating one set of
explicity experiences into another one is called intersectionality, it's
the contemporary rejoinder to class consciousness and surely represents a
giant evolutionary step beyond that old Lukacsian relic. In an imperial and
soon, post-imperial US context, it seems to me that the types of coalitions
that can be knitted together through intersectionality need to be extended,
augmented and/or relayed by other communication processes and other
aesthetics too, in order to deal with the sprawling issues of politic
economy and political ecology, which just keep spinning further out of
control.

The US isn't the only context. The partial breakdown of the EU is a pretty
serious failure to manage complexity. Other regions face still other
versions of this problem. Let's talk about it.

best, Brian
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